Business Standard

Life without Google: Australia faces unthinkable in spat with search giant

Google opposes a planned law that would force it and Facebook Inc. to pay Australian publishers for news content.

Sundar Pichai
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Sundar Pichai, chief executive officer of Alphabet Inc., pauses during a discussion on artificial intelligence at the Bruegel European economic think tank in Brussels | Photo: Bloomberg

Angus Whitley and Georgina McKay | Bloomberg
Imagine a world without Google, the search engine so pervasive it’s the starting point for more than five billion queries a day. That’s the reality facing Australia, where the tech giant is threatening to unplug its homepage in a standoff with the government.

Google opposes a planned law that would force the company and Facebook Inc. to pay Australian publishers for news content. The Internet juggernaut’s ultimatum to local lawmakers--change the legislation, or else--has left a digital vacuum hanging over a nation that essentially knows just one way to navigate the web. Google runs 95% of Internet searches in Australia.

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